Phase-dependent study of near-infrared disk emission lines in LB-1
Jifeng Liu, Zheng Zheng, Roberto Soria, Jesus Aceituno, Haotong Zhang,, Youjun Lu, Song Wang, Wolf-Rainer Hamann, Lida M. Oskinova, Varsha, Ramachandran, Hailong Yuan, Zhongrui Bai, Shu Wang, Brendan J. McKee,, Jianfeng Wu, Junfeng Wang, Mario Lattanzi, Krzysztof Belczynski

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution phase-resolved spectroscopy of LB-1 to analyze its disk emission lines, revealing the primary's mass and ruling out certain models, thus providing new insights into the system's nature.
Contribution
It presents the first phase-resolved spectroscopic analysis of near-infrared lines in LB-1, determining the primary's mass and disk dynamics, and refuting the circumbinary disk hypothesis.
Findings
Disk emission lines trace the primary's orbital motion.
Primary mass estimated to be 4-8 times the secondary's.
V/R ratio varies sinusoidally with orbital phase.
Abstract
The mass, origin and evolutionary stage of the binary system LB-1 has been the subject of intense debate, following the claim that it hosts an 70 black hole, in stark contrast with the expectations for stellar remnants in the Milky Way. We conducted a high-resolution, phase-resolved spectroscopic study of the near-infrared Paschen lines in this system, using the 3.5-m telescope at Calar Alto Observatory. We find that Pa and Pa (after proper subtraction of the stellar absorption component) are well fitted with a standard double-peaked model, typical of disk emission. We measured the velocity shifts of the red and blue peaks at 28 orbital phases: the line center has an orbital motion in perfect antiphase with the stellar motion, and the radial velocity amplitude ranges from 8 to 13 km/s for different choices of lines and profile modelling. We interpret this…
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